Library IdealsOpen Court Publishing Company, 1918 - Počet stran: 78 WISCONSIN, a true cradle of freedom and successful government, has fostered several librarians who were true humanists. Dr. Peckham was one. Dr. Thwaites was another. Henry E. Legler was unlike either of these, but greater than either in his continued and unabated activity for the good of the people. Once, on being complimented for his splendid work in natural history and his persistence in the pursuit of scientific facts, Dr. Peckham remarked: "Oh, yes, but the facts have no value in themselves. They merely build up the groundwork of the ideas, and help you climb to the point of view where the deeper aspects of the subject spread out before you like a landscape beneath a mountain-top." Mr. Legler's activity in behalf of libraries will support the same explanation. He seemed always immersed in detail, always planning some movement and carrying it into effect by his peculiar, dynamic persistence. But he who observed the man kindly and closely cannot have failed to have noticed that there was a distinct Beyond illumining and overshadowing it all. There was a dream to come true, a vision to be unfolded. The dream and vision were in the man's speech and eye. He lived under a prophecy. |
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Strana viii
... means in his power of making his fellow-men ever more free and happy, ever more master of themselves, ever more capable of being guided, not by fear and never by prejudice, but by a live responsibility to the spirit within them ...
... means in his power of making his fellow-men ever more free and happy, ever more master of themselves, ever more capable of being guided, not by fear and never by prejudice, but by a live responsibility to the spirit within them ...
Strana viii
... means in his power of making his fellow - men ever more free and happy , ever more master of themselves , ever more capable of being guided , not by fear and never by prejudice , but by a live responsibility to the spirit within them ...
... means in his power of making his fellow - men ever more free and happy , ever more master of themselves , ever more capable of being guided , not by fear and never by prejudice , but by a live responsibility to the spirit within them ...
Strana 1
... means an approach to that critical period in the history of popular government when wise leadership and extension of education alone can serve to avert threatened disruption . Upon the people who are near to the soil will devolve the ...
... means an approach to that critical period in the history of popular government when wise leadership and extension of education alone can serve to avert threatened disruption . Upon the people who are near to the soil will devolve the ...
Strana 3
... . Any such admission bodes but ill for the future of this land . It means that the number of men who feel an ownership in the land , in houses , in the govern- ment must decrease . And therein lies a danger not THE PROBLEM OF THE CITIES 3.
... . Any such admission bodes but ill for the future of this land . It means that the number of men who feel an ownership in the land , in houses , in the govern- ment must decrease . And therein lies a danger not THE PROBLEM OF THE CITIES 3.
Strana 9
... means of books or other means of culture . " We must now educate our masters , " said Mr. Lowe when the Reform Bill of 1867 was passed . He was quite right , for the said masters were by no means quick to educate themselves , and the ...
... means of books or other means of culture . " We must now educate our masters , " said Mr. Lowe when the Reform Bill of 1867 was passed . He was quite right , for the said masters were by no means quick to educate themselves , and the ...
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